Black Gold Still Rules in Pipelineistan

3 years ago Environment

Drone War conceptPhoto:
UCAS Mission / Drone War concept
Graphic Art – Northrup Grumman

War in Afghanistan and Pakistan –

The United States wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have proven to be beyond stupid and cruel. The motives behind each war have been clear for some time. Iraq may possess the largest oil reserves on the planet after Saudi Arabia. Afghanistan must be a key player in a long planned, complex Central Asian pipeline network for oil and natural gas as well. The massive oil corporations fully intend to extend the Age of Oil as long as possible, regardless of the consequences to the planet's economy and ecology. Talk aside, we see nothing but cooperation and collaboration from the major sovereign states of the world for whom the question is not 'If' but 'How'.

X-47B UCAS in flightPhoto:
X-47B UCAS in flight
Artist -­ Northrup Grumman

Is there any success to report after eight years into the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan? If you believe that the Age of Oil must be continued at any cost, then stability in northern Iraq where Kurds control vast oil reserves is important. The Kurds view the United States as an ally and sympathetic to their cause of a semi-autonomous province within Iraq. The Kurdish independent movement believes in a greater Kurdistan nation that draws upon territory in Iraq, Turkey and elsewhere.

USA oil companies have been in the northern Kurdistan provinces of Iraq for some time, attempting to lock down major oil deals. The new Iraqi government is now soliciting bids for the development of several major oil fields, and the United States is not given a preferred position. The chaos in Afghanistan has prevented potential energy resources from being adequately mapped and described. Although rarely mentioned in the press, American interest in Iran may stem from that country’s possession of at least 10% of the world's proven oil reserves, and huge proven gas reserves that are the second largest on the planet next to those in Russia – see Source #11.

Pipelineistan –

Kazakhstan / Russia / North Caspian / Oil and GasPhoto:
Kazakhstan / Russia / North Caspian Oil and Gas
Map -­ Department of Energy / United States government

The strategic value of Afghanistan to the United States and NATO remains its central position within Pipelineistan, a gigantic, complex oil and gas pipeline project that would traverse Central Asia. Pipelineistan requires the participation of Kazakhstan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, India, Turkey, Turkmenistan, China, Russia, and Armenia. Located on the other side of the world, the United States is nonetheless determined to be sitting at the table. China, Russia and Iran envisage a new Silk Road that transports oil and gas extending from the Caspian Sea to Xinjiang Province in China’s far west.

Kazakhstan to China / Proposed Oil PipelinesPhoto:
Kazakhstan to China / Proposed Oil Pipelines
Map ­- Department of Energy / United States government

The United States counters with the Albanian Macedonian Bulgarian Oil Corporation and the Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline. At the end of the day, it has to come down to which routes are chosen to bring Kazakhstan’s enormous oil reserves to market after production starts in 2013. Whoever controls Pipelineistan may well control the world's strategic energy supplies for the remainder of this century. See the important analysis of Central Asian pipelines and oil wars by award winning international journalist Pepe Escobar in Source #12. Yes, Virginia, Black Gold still rules and this is why the “Bull in the China Shop ( re United States) cannot afford to leave Afghanistan, nor give up control over Pakistan's military policy.

B-1 bomber over AfghanistanPhoto:
B-1 Lancer bomber over Afghanistan
Photo -­ Master Sergeant Andrew Dunaway / USAF

"Full Spectrum Dominance" Falls on Its Face –

Attempts to redefine reality to suit USA objectives have met with little success because the fundamentals are well known and not overly complicated. The Taliban is not Al Qaeda, has not fused with AQ and has a very different and locally focused agenda - takeover over the Afghanistan government. The Taliban are not a global terrorist organization, and have no plans to become one. To the extent that Taliban controlled territories are made available to Al Qaeda for base of operations, the United States has only itself to blame.


Are Drone attacks justified? This is an interview in the United States at Fora TV with Hamid Mir, a prominent Pakistani journalist who was the only journalist able to interview Osama bin Laden after 9/11. Drone missions are far less costly than military aviation sorties that require a human pilot and crew.

Military operations brought to Afghanistan, and forced upon Pakistan amidst the AfPAK War, have created a new huge refugee problem in the northwest provinces of Pakistan. These refugees hate the United States because of the civilian casualties caused by the drone missions. To continue to talk about "winning hearts and minds" in Afghan and Pakistan villages is ludicrous. The score card of terrorist leaders killed is beside the point because there is an endless supply of good candidates ready to fill vacant leadership positions as the past eight years has demonstrated.

MQ-9 Reaper in flightPhoto:
MQ-9 Reaper drone in flight
Photo -­ Lt. Colonel Leslie Pratt / USAF

Propaganda about the birth of 'fledging democracies' would be laughable, if the human costs were not so severe. Sectarian Sunni-Shi'ite warfare in several disguises continues in Iraq. There are political analysts who believe that Iraq is the most politically corrupt state of all. Afghanistan remains as it has always been, a tribal federation where alliances shift and move in complex patterns yet to be understood in the West, and it remains the premier narco state on the planet. The United States is now deeply enmeshed in a plot to remove Hamid Karzai from office as the President of Afghanistan. His opponent in the recently held corrupt elections is believed to be more easily manipulated by American interests. So much for genuine 'fledgling democracy'; the energy stakes are much too high for that.

The human cost in civilian casualties and social/cultural destruction in Afghanistan, and now Pakistan, is well known, thoroughly documented and apparently of little concern to those obsessed with 'full spectrum dominance'. Tons of verbiage attempting to convince the world otherwise have accomplished little except to lower America's integrity and trust index to near zero After eight years of these two wars, USA prestige and influence in the world has reached a new low point.

Trillion Dollar BillPhoto:
Trillion Dollar Bill
Graphic Art ­- methodshop

The National Priorities Project / Cost of War Counters Trade-Off –

As always, the Bottom Line is Money. There are a number of cost of war counters on the web, but a new web site has developed an exceptional presentation. The National Priorities Project mission is to analyze "complex federal spending data and translate it into easy-to-understand information about how [United States] federal tax dollars are spent."

The National Priorities web site is an education for the world, not just American voters. The expected running tally, cost-of-war counter is present. In addition, there are separate Cost of War in Afghanistan and Cost of War in Iraq counters. The visitor can choose a specific defense program and home state, and the counter will calculate what non defense programs could have been funded in that state if the chosen defense program were not funded. These counters are the bottom line look at an oft discussed topic, 'what would we get if this or that defense program was not funded?'

Military Cost to Secure_Energy FY2009Photo:
Military Cost to Secure_Energy FY2009 / HI
Chart ­- National Priority Project

For those with blogs or web sites, National Priority makes available free code snippets so you can place these calculators on your page. This is a great site with superb calculators. Spend some time at National Priority Project and think again about where America is taking the world.

Disclaimer: The author of this post has no professional relationship with the National Priorities Project.

Sources -

1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. 11, 12

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Comments

Old Comments

merlynne6 says

Dec 27th, 2010 at 12am
Continuing with the "Grand Game" for control of Central Asian energy resources: 1. China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) has announced the discovery of yet another gas field on the right bank of the Amu Darya River in Turkmenistan, holding in excess of 100 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas. Separately, Turkmenistan President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow inaugurated a new compressor station at the Bagtiyarlyk fields, estimated by Chinese engineers to hold 1.6 trillion cubic meters of natural gas. These fields feed the Turkmenistan-China pipeline, which traverses Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan and was opened in December 2009 with a projected capacity of 40 billion cubic meters per year (bcm/y) by 2015, Learn more: http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/LJ08Ag02.html - October 8, 2010 2. Several of Russia's large new gas fields are starting to come on line, reducing its need for Turkmen gas. The Yamal Peninsula deposit in far northern Russia is believed to hold some 16 trillion cubic meters of gas. Learn more: http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/LJ22Ag01.html - October 22, 2010 3. Uncle Sam, energy and peace in Asia . . . The TAPI pipeline runs on a roughly 1,600-kilometer route along the ancient Silk Road. Learn more: http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/LJ30Ag01.html - October 30, 2010

merlynne6 says

Oct 18th, 2010 at 12am
Status on the diverse threads of Pipelinestan - 1. Status on Nabucco Project: "The existing pipeline from Koropeje in Turkmenistan to Kordkuy in Iran will have additional compressor stations installed in order to increase its carrying capacity. On the Turkmenistan side, the existing pipeline will be extended to the Dauletabad field to provide for increased quantities, and it will be extended to Khangiran on the Iranian side to provide for increased processing capacity. The construction involved in extending the pipeline Iranian side is projected to take up to two years to execute. Learn more at http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/LI24Ag01.html 2. For those who held a perennial grievance that the United States paid scant attention to energy resources in the Central Asian region, October 1, 2010 presented an extraordinary sight. President Barack Obama had a meeting with Kyrgyz leader Rosa Otunbayeva in New York. Obama will be signaling how central Kyrgyzstan has become for US foreign policy. A visit by the Russian Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov to the Kyrgyz capital of Bishkek has been abruptly canceled and the signing of a major Russian-Kyrgyz military agreement on Friday has been inexplicably put off to March next year. Learn more at http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/LI25Ag01.html. 3. "Future historians may well agree that the twenty-first century Silk Road first opened for business on December 14, 2009. That was the day a crucial stretch of pipeline officially went into operation linking the fabulously energy-rich state of Turkmenistan (via Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan) to Xinjiang Province in China’s far west. .. "The bottom line is that, by 2013, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Hong Kong will be cruising to ever more dizzying economic heights courtesy of natural gas supplied by the 1,833-kilometer-long Central Asia Pipeline, then projected to be operating at full capacity. And to think that, in a few more years, China’s big cities will undoubtedly also be getting a taste of Iraq’s fabulous, barely tapped oil reserves, conservatively estimated at 115 billion barrels, but possibly closer to 143 billion barrels, which would put it ahead of Iran. When the Bush administration’s armchair generals launched their Global War on Terror, this was not exactly what they had in mind." Learn more with this update by Pepe Escobar: http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/175306/

merlynne6 says

Sep 22nd, 2010 at 12am
Diverse threads surrounding Pipelinestan. BP on the run in Pakistan? http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/LG27Df03.html Covert United States backing for the uprising in Bishkek http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/LD23Ag02.html Caspian pipeline knots tighten http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/LD23Ag04.html AfPak and the new great game / It's all about Pipelinestan http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/LI09Df01.html

merlynne6 says

Jun 15th, 2010 at 12am
Military personnel and American geologists have uncovered ~$USD1billion in Afghnistan's untapped mineral reserves. This public announcement provides yet another reason to justify the ongoing war and rally public opinion. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/14/world/asia/14minerals.html

Bennett (author) says

Jan 18th, 2010 at 12am
This story will be dynamic and important for a long time. Add these to the 'must read' list: 1. China plays Pipelineistan, by Pepe Escobar at http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/KL24Ag07.html - Dec.24.2009 2. A Delicate Dance of Power, by Robert M Cutler at http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/KL24Ag03.html - Dec.24.2009 3. Russia, China, Iran Redraw Energy Map, by M K Bhadrakumar at http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/LA08Ag01.html - January 08, 2010.

Bennett (author) says

Dec 2nd, 2009 at 12am
Recently published and worth a read: "A "Necessary War" - for a Gas Pipeline / It's Obama's War Now" by Gary Leupp at http://www.counterpunch.org/leupp11302009.html.

Grams says

Nov 1st, 2009 at 12am
Look thru the lies! Nice;-)